Proud to Be A Trial Lawyer
Trial Lawyers Are America's Small Businesses
Business groups often claim that trial lawyers are a threat to small
businesses. The truth is that most trial lawyers are small businesses.
Here are the facts:
The Small Business Administration defines a small business as
"one that is independently owned and operated and which is not
dominant in its field of operation."1
- A 2002 survey of the AAJ membership shows that 34% of all AAJ
members are sole practitionersand a full 75% are in firms
of fewer than 5 lawyers.2
- This puts AAJ members directly in line with the 600,000 members
of the National Federation of Independent Business55% of which
have five employees or fewer while 72% have fewer than 10 employees.3
Trial lawyers hardly dominate the profession economically, either.
- According to the U.S. Department of Labor, the mean annual earnings
for all lawyers in the United States is $108,700. AAJ's survey
shows that almost a third of AAJ members earn less than $100,000
annually.
- And 20% earn under $75,000which puts them on a par with
the average American elementary and secondary school administrator.4
Since small businesses represent 40 percent of the U.S. Gross Domestic
product and 98 percent of the new businesses in America,5
AAJ members not only represent small business, they support the American
economy and help it flourish.
- Small Business Act [Public Law 85-536, §
3 (a) (1)], http://www.sba.gov/regulations/sbaact/sbaact.html
- AAJ Membership Survey, 2002.
- "Who NFIB Represents," National
Federation of Independent Business Web site
- U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational
Employment Statistics, National employment and wage data survey
May 2003. See
here.
- "Who NFIB Represents," National
Federation of Independent Business Web site
September 2004
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